Eni Considers Return to Oil Trading as Rivals Reap Billions

Italy’s Eni is considering reopening its oil-trading business as it misses out on the profits that its fellow European supermajors are generating from selling the commodities they produce, the company’s chief executive told the Financial Times.

“I stopped trading in 2019, but the other big companies are all traders,” Claudio Descalzi told the publication in an interview. “BP, Shell, Total are big traders, and they make billions from that.”

Indeed, trading has been especially profitable for the other supermajors, so Eni is pivoting via partnerships. Descalzi told the FT that Eni was in preliminary talks with a number of commodity trading houses, including Mercuria.

“It is not in our DNA. We are not very commercial,” Descalzi explained. “So I thought to become commercial, we have to have a partnership to understand the business.” “If we can offer physical hedging, that is a big advantage for them. We can complement each other,” the chief executive of the supermajor added, noting the amount of oil and gas that Eni produces should make it an attractive partner.

Despite oil trading being a major profit source for Big Oil, Shell, for one, flagged a weaker performance of its trading division ahead of its fourth-quarter results announcement. BP also said its trading business has weakened over the final three months of last year.

TotalEnergies, meanwhile, recently sealed a trading joint venture deal with Bahrain’s BapcoEnergies backed by production flows from Bapco Energies’ refinery. The new entity is positioned as a competitive regional trading player, designed to maximize downstream value and broaden access to international markets for Bahraini oil products.

Big Oil, and especially European Big Oil, has recently pivoted away from its low-carbon energy ventures and back to its core business of producing and refining oil and gas amid slowing energy transition momentum. Shareholders are now pushing for growth as predictions for peak oil move into the more distant future.

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    US-Iran Talks to Span Past Summer As Oil Flows Remain Disrupted

    A U.S.-Iran peace deal is not weeks away. Officials in the Gulf region are bracing for a timeline closer to six months. The Strait of Hormuz remains effectively shut. Flows…

    Hormuz Crisis Forces Rethink on Alternative Marine Fuels Investment

    The escalation of conflict across the Middle East and the disruption to energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz have introduced a variable into the maritime energy transition that regulatory…

    Have You Seen?

    Altura Energy targets green helium growth amid market instability

    • April 17, 2026
    Altura Energy targets green helium growth amid market instability

    Kent to provide EPC for MorGen’s 20MW UK hydrogen plant

    • April 17, 2026
    Kent to provide EPC for MorGen’s 20MW UK hydrogen plant

    Inpex adds LNG carrier capacity amid rising supply fears

    • April 17, 2026
    Inpex adds LNG carrier capacity amid rising supply fears

    Poland’s Gaz-System heads toward EU hydrogen TSO status

    • April 17, 2026
    Poland’s Gaz-System heads toward EU hydrogen TSO status

    ITM Power joins Rheinmetall’s plans for hydrogen-based defence e-fuel network

    • April 17, 2026
    ITM Power joins Rheinmetall’s plans for hydrogen-based defence e-fuel network

    Trump’s Energy Leaders to Hold Call With CEOs on Iran War, Source Says

    • April 17, 2026
    Trump’s Energy Leaders to Hold Call With CEOs on Iran War, Source Says

    US-Iran Talks to Span Past Summer As Oil Flows Remain Disrupted

    • April 17, 2026
    US-Iran Talks to Span Past Summer As Oil Flows Remain Disrupted

    Analysis: Why government warnings are a sign of progress in the CO2 conversation

    • April 16, 2026
    Analysis: Why government warnings are a sign of progress in the CO2 conversation

    Analysis: Why government warnings are a sign of progress in the CO₂ conversation

    • April 16, 2026
    Analysis: Why government warnings are a sign of progress in the CO₂ conversation

    The Iran War Has Shattered Oil’s Price Compass: Bousso

    • April 16, 2026
    The Iran War Has Shattered Oil’s Price Compass: Bousso